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International trade

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fullscreen: International trade

Monograph

Identifikator:
1758394757
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-136209
Document type:
Monograph
Author:
Taussig, Frank William http://d-nb.info/gnd/120199459
Title:
International trade
Place of publication:
New York, NY
Publisher:
Macmillan
Year of publication:
1927
Scope:
XXI, 425 Seiten
graph. Darst.
Digitisation:
2021
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
Part III. International trade under inconvertible paper
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • International trade
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Part I. Theory
  • Part II. Problems of verification
  • Part III. International trade under inconvertible paper
  • Index

Full text

388 CIN TERNATIONAL TRADE 
r 
|] 
may be divergence, and thus an effect either way on imports and 
exports. 
Which of the two possible results will be found when paper 
issues are first put out, or when paper is in the first stage of added 
issue, will depend on the way the purchasing power is used. When 
a government resorts to paper, it does not scatter the money broad- 
cast, as might be inferred from the way in which we often speak of 
the “issue” of paper money. The money Is spent; it is applied 
to the purchase of goods or services. The effect on prices is first 
felt on the things for which the government bids. These may hap- 
pen to be services and domestic goods; and then there will be no 
proximate effect on other domestic goods and services than those 
bought by the government, and none on imported or exported 
goods; hence no immediate change in the currents of international 
trade. As time goes on, the tendency to rising prices spreads in all 
directions. Those who sold the goods or services to the govern- 
ment have larger money incomes; they spend more, and the prices 
of other goods go up. I see no ground for supposing that under 
conditions of this kind there will be any special advance in the prices 
of either imported or exported goods; there will be nothing in the 
nature of a bounty either way. So far as concerns international 
trade, the case will be neutral. 
If, however, the government — or the other persons first getting 
command of the paper money — uses its additional purchasing 
power for buying imported goods, or for making remittances to 
foreigners on other than merchandise account, the bounty on 
exports will arise. These purchases enter the market for foreign 
exchange, and the exchange rate rises on countries to which 
remittances are to be made. It rises more than prices of goods 
made at home, if indeed these rise in the first instance at all. 
The exporter who has exchange on foreign countries to sell makes an 
extra profit. He can sell his exchange (in Germany, say) at a 
higher price, while his expenses for the moment are no greater. 
As has just been said, the added margin of profit will doubtless be 
shared between him and the various middlemen. If exchange 
rises fast and far, if the margin of profit is great, there will be
	        

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International Trade. Macmillan, 1927.
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